Much like staggered film and even music video releases, this is just ridiculous in such an interconnected world - all the labels and studios are doing are hurting themselves.And this thread is timely because right now I am facing the conundrum: get a torrent of the Sleigh Bells album or wait until June 18 for it to end up in stores ...
ETA: Torrent. I'm not waiting 2+ weeks for something that was released in the U.S. last month.
Some people will happily download bootlegs just to get their hands on the product, but will still buy a legit copy when it finally hits stores.
Auto-tune is not the monster it's made out to be - it just needs to be used to good effect and not as a fallback for every wannabe crossover rapper who can't sing. -.-autotune is the future
Have you seen this? Tween death threats are adorable.One Word. Justin Bieber.
Wouldn't be surprised. Merchandising and touring is where the money seems to be at - people actually feel like they're getting something worthwhile for their money.interesting to see the link between this and declining revenue from music sales, perhaps it's just an effect of inflation/gfc
On a final note, I wonder if they've done any modelling to see how demand might shift if digital download prices came right down. If albums cost only a few bucks, would anyone have qualms about paying for legit stuff? Would fans even buy more because they see it as better value? (And while we're at it, how many "lost sales" from piracy are attributed to people who may never bought music in the first place?)
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