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ivan@stellysee.de
From | "Jaimie Vernon" <bullseyecanada@hotmail.com> |
Subject | Re: the death of the CD |
Date | Fri, 05 Sep 2003 09:55:12 -0400 |
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At Date: Thu, 04 Sep 2003 17:52:13 Ronald Sanchez wrote:
>The thing is for bands to make their albums worth the money. Good songs
>presented at "album" length. The 74 minute albums are just so hard to
>listen
>to, and more than a little responsible for the lack of interest. On the
>other
>hand historical releases and reissues should be as full as possible.
>Interesting covers are also part of the deal. How many cds do you buy that
>have
>dull grafix or just loads of impossible to read lyrics? Remember those
>early
>CBS cds that just had blank insides?
Totally agree!! And what gets my goat are album titles that are
disassociated from the album graphics. You might have a band with an album
called "Gibblet" or some such nonsense and the cover art features a picture
of a donkey being paraded through the streets of Mexico. Huh?
I can appreciate the abstract (Nickelback's "Silver Side Up" with the
mercury dripping from a bandaged eye comes to mind), but when acts are just
being obtuse or an image is stuck on the cover because the bass player's
girlfriend drew it I have a hard time equating these with the SOUND of the
band.
If you've got nothing remotely interesting to use for album art put a
picture of the band on the cover. It's worked since the 1960's...it still
works today.
Personally, I'm a fan of the covers used on most Jam Records, Not Lame, and
BongoBeat releases.
Jaimie Vernon,
President,
Bullseye Records of Canada, Inc.
http://www.bullseyecanada.com
"Not Suing Our Customers Since 1985!"
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