here we go, mammoth post of arguments & rebuttals....
b&w wrote:ThinKing wrote:Also I must stand up now and say I particularly detest those who share music pre-release. In my mind it is always disrespectful to pass round an artist's work for free with no consideration for their wishes/rights, but to pre-empt their release by stealing their thunder is the lowest of the low, and I challenge anyone who does so and still calls themselves a music-lover.
Hmmmmm, you appear to be letting your personal opinion interfere with basic logic and reality here. Let me illustrate via example. A dubstep friendly radio DJ get an advance promo copy of an upcoming release and plays it on his/her radio program. Fans listening to the radio show record it/download it and share it with peers precisely because they
are music lovers.
DJs don't play whole LPs over the radio, and not in hi-quality either. This comparison is facile and irrelevant.
b&w wrote:I don't even like Radiohead that much, but I bought their album because they let me decide the price.
no you didn't - you 'bought' it because they made a huge song & dance about the 'new paradigm' they feel they have introduced by selling/giving away their LP on their own web site - despite the fact that many artists, big and small, have been doing the same for a long long time. I'm sure that you don't go about DLing every LP that is given away for free. You have simply been made aware of this particular album due to good marketing and a swathe of publicity for one of the world's biggest bands.
b&w wrote:A side note...I produce music myself and personally believe it helps me to have my stuff on P2P file sharing networks and free digital downloads...I consistently sell MP3s and hard copies of my music via sites like CD baby and myspace...I think the file sharing actually aides in sustaining that.
it's your right as an artist, and creator of an original work, to do as you wish with your music. It is also the right of every other artist to exert their wishes over their own works. If that happens to be that it should only be available to BUY, on an officially released 12"/CD/mp3, then we as consumers and supporters of a scene should respect that.
b&w wrote:You're working from a myopic vantage point I'm afraid...thinking too concretely about this. I have turned many friends of mine onto dubstep via DJ mixes I have made and then given them. They in turn buy releases by the artists they like and support local dubstep club nights. What price are you going to put on that?
b&w wrote:selector.dub.u wrote:Sharing a whole release before it is even in the stores and announcing it to the world is removing the incentive for some people to buy it.
How do you know this? What if it builds a buzz and actually gets more people to buy it? Why does this possibility not occur to people?
this is spurious and untimately a non-argument. Can YOU tell me i.e. quantify in hard figures how much filesharing has benefitted artist X or label Y? No. Conversely, I cannot quantify the opposite i.e. what negative effects there are. However, since (I assume) that we logically agree that there must be both postive and negative effects, and that it is impossible to prove whether ultimately the good outweighs the bad, I am of the opinion that filesharing should not be supported in order to err on the side of caution.
If a label or artist believes that giving their music away for free in addition to selling it is a positive thing, then it is their and
only their prerogative to do so. I am sure that most musicians in this day & age are perfectly aware of their options should they wish to share their music for free - If they want to do it, let them do it their own way in their own time.
I cannot see how anyone can seek justify their actions when DLing/sharing illegally-ripped music simply because they have assumed a positive effect on sales to assuage their own guilt.
All I can do is repeat myself and state that it is inherently disrespectful to rip/leak music onto p2p/torrent networks, since it is down to the artist/label to decide how to disseminate their product. Those who download are essentially showing their support for rippers/leakers by DLing and re-hosting copies of the music in question.
In my mind anyone who supports illegal filesharing in this way and still considers themselves a 'music-lover' should re-evaluate the way in which they support the art and artists which they purport to 'love'.