To Whom It
May Concern at the CRIA:
I have been
an avid music collector for many years, and have approximately
1,000 CDs in my collection, not counting albums that I have purchased
over the internet and own only digital copies of. I purchase approximately
30-40 new CDs per year. However, thanks to your recent decision
to block Canadian users from accessing Demonoid, I have decided
that I cannot continue to support this backwards, dysfunctional
industry with my money any longer and, as such, I do not plan
on purchasing music ever again if it means that one penny goes
to your organization.
I listen
to heavy metal music, a form of music that "the industry" stopped
supporting many years ago, so I have a hard time feeling any sympathy.
Sites such as Demonoid have done far more to promote the music
I love than your organization or the industry in general has ever
done.
I can find out about new artists and new releases from artists
that are never promoted. I can listen to music from artists that
have never been played on the radio, will never be shown on MuchMusic
or MTV, and never have a review or even mention of their new album
written about in the local newspaper. From listening to this music,
I can make an informed decision if I wish to purchase the album
or not, as I am not going to gamble $15-20 on something that I
haven't heard anything of before.
Twenty-five
years ago, I primarily learned about music from friends who dubbed
a copy onto a cassette tape, where I could listen to it and make
a decision if I wanted to buy the tape for myself. Now, many years
removed from school, my "gang" of friends to share music with
has shifted from cassette tapes and the school cafeteria to sharing
mp3s online. I listen to some things that I don't like, and consequently,
I don't buy those albums. What I do like, I buy, or at least I
used to, before your decision intended to stop me from hearing
new music.
The industry
cries that record sales are down, and blames this all on internet
downloading. I won't be so naïve as to say that internet
downloading has no impact on the sales.
|
Twenty-five
years ago, I primarily learned about music from friends
who dubbed a copy onto a cassette tape, where I could listen
to it and make a decision if I wanted to buy the tape for
myself. Now, many years removed from school, my "gang" of
friends to share music with has shifted from cassette tapes
and the school cafeteria to sharing mp3s online. I listen
to some things that I don't like, and consequently, I don't
buy those albums. What I do like, I buy, or at least I used
to, before your decision intended to stop me from hearing
new music.
|
Downloading
has certainly stopped me from making the stupid purchases where
I heard one single that I liked and bought an entire album only
to find out that the rest of the songs are crap, and the CD sits
collecting dust on my shelf. But for every CD that I didn't buy
based on those premises, there are two or three other CDs that
I did buy because I heard of them for the first time on a site
like Demonoid.
In the meantime,
the music industry itself needs to recognize that they are to
blame for sagging record sales. For years, they have been marketing
recycled crap, and people are getting tired of it. On the odd
occasion that something fresh and new accidentally slips through
and gets radio play, the music industry immediately signs a seemingly
infinite number of clone bands that makes the "new, fresh" sound
boring almost instantly. It seems the music industry doesn't even
care about making or promoting good music any more.
Instead, they market a young, pretty face that can dance provocatively
and lip-synch well, and push this on the radio stations to play
while getting the tabloids to print large pictures of their breasts.
If bands like AC/DC or Motorhead were to emerge today, they would
never be successful; not because of poor record sales due to downloading,
but due to the fact that they're ugly so the record company wouldn't
promote them, if they picked them up at all. In the meantime,
they're falling all over themselves to promote Britney Spears,
Lindsay Lohan, or any teenage tramp that can be airbrushed to
look sexy.
The record
labels cry about downloading cutting into the profits of the sales
of albums. They put out "greatest hits" albums by 20-year-olds
with two or three albums under their belts, released with one
new track to try and sucker the fans that already have both albums
into spending another $20 for one new song, or re-releasing a
three-month-old album with a "previously unreleased bonus track".
Then they can't understand why people aren't buying them, and
cry foul that people are downloading the one new song instead.
I know not
only the record companies are crying. Artists that have been around
long enough to have enough clout to get a cut of the record sales
are concerned about their cut, like Metallica that also clamor
that "downloading is evil", and then go on to sell over nine million
copies of their last album instead of 9.1 million. Boo hoo. Meanwhile,
many younger, smaller artists favor downloading, because they
know it's the only way that people will get to hear the music
and in turn come out to see their shows, because the record label
sure as hell isn't promoting them. But they can't say that out
loud, can they? If they do, guess which band is going to get dropped
by the label?
|
Without
Demonoid, where would I have found out about bands like
Evile or Dublin Death Patrol and made a decision to purchase
their album online (because no record store that I have
found in Canada carries either one)? And god forbid the
CRIA would care about the promotion of Canadian talent,
such as longtime recording artist Annihilator, which released
one of the better albums of 2007.
|
So tell me,
what does the CRIA do to promote metal? Oh, right, you've got
a link to the top 50 "metal" albums in Canada, which after a quick
glance at the top ten this week includes punk acts like Dropkick
Murphys, Finger Eleven, and Billy Talent, and rock acts like Nickelback
and Queen, but very little that resembles heavy metal. (Perhaps
you should ask the Celtic punk band, Dropkick Murphys, what they
think of being labeled as "metal".)
And also
tell me, without Demonoid, where would I have found out about
bands like Evile or Dublin Death Patrol and made a decision to
purchase their album online (because no record store that I have
found in Canada carries either one)? And god forbid the CRIA would
care about the promotion of Canadian talent, such as longtime
recording artist Annihilator, which released one of the better
albums of 2007.
However, I have yet to see their new album sold in any store in
Canada, including HMV's flagship store on Yonge Street in Toronto,
and I ultimately had to buy a copy from a UK website. Considering
the only place I had heard about this album was having downloaded
it from Demonoid, do you really expect anyone to make this kind
of effort to buy an album without ever having heard it?
The record
labels and CRIA have gone to great lengths to tell us that downloading
and sharing music is killing the music industry. Open your eyes
and you will see that the music industry dinosaur has already
been killing itself for years, and by resisting technology rather
than embracing it and using it to their advantage. "Oh, but they
have," you try to insist, pointing to the sites devoted to selling
music in mp3 format online.
I notice that most of the metal bands I am interested in are still
not available through these services. I also notice that buying
an entire album ends up costing as much, if not more, than if
I went to buy it in the store, even though there are no longer
costs of materials or shipping that have to be paid for, and once
again, I fail to come up with any sympathy for the music industry.
I hope the music industry does die, because I know that music
itself will not die so with the corrupt aspects of the industry
gone, only then might music once again flourish.
Sincerely,
A
former music buyer