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Tuesday, July 2, 2002 |
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I just converted another cassette to a CD & MP3s. This time it was a lot easier now that I figured out how everything works in Roxio's CD Spin Doctor.
The cassette was Youssou N'dour's "Vol 12; Jamm (La Paix)", one of his African imports. I prefer the version of "Sabar" on this tape to the version on his American CD. It also has a few other songs that aren't available on any CDs. |
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My copy of Learning Cocoa just arrived. 5:13:02 PM |
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A musician defends file-sharing, debunks the RIAA. Depending on your perspective, Janis Ian is either a struggling new science fiction writer or an established and well-respected recording artist with 17 albums to her credit. She's written a powerful debunking of the RIAA's claims about the effects of file-sharing on music-sales. Highly recommended reading from a music industry person who is far more articulate than, say, Courtney Love. Free exposure is practically a thing of the past for entertainers. Getting your record played at radio costs more money than most of us dream of ever earning. Free downloading gives a chance to every do-it-yourselfer out there. Every act that can't get signed to a major, for whatever reason, can reach literally millions of new listeners, enticing them to buy the CD and come to the concerts. Where else can a new act, or one that doesn't have a label deal, get that kind of exposure?Link Discuss (Thanks, Velma!) [bOing bOing]
This is the best article I've read on the subject. The big record companies are slowly becoming extinct, but they're afraid to admit it and look for other ways to make money. What we're now seeing is the death throes of dinosaurs. |